Was Bitcoin Manipulated?

By Teeka TiwariJuly 7, 2018Print

Editor’s Note: Bill recently described cryptocurrencies like bitcoin as “an unsolved jigsaw puzzle with the pieces scattered across the floor.” Today, cryptocurrency expert and former hedge fund manager Teeka Tiwari attempts to piece together part of that puzzle.

Recent reports from the mainstream financial press claim that bitcoin’s meteoric rise in 2017 was partly due to manipulation. Today, Teeka reveals the key detail that the newspapers missed…

In an article published on Sunday, July 1, Kessler cites a University of Texas study that argues manipulation was behind half of bitcoin’s 2017 move upwards. The study pins the blame on a crypto coin called Tether (USDT).

Tether is a fixed-value, or “stable” coin. It supposedly backs each coin with one U.S. dollar. To be clear, I have never been a fan of Tether because it requires you to trust that there is $1 backing each coin.

In the January 2018 issue of my Palm Beach Confidential newsletter, I wrote:

[Tether] claims that for every Tether in the market, it has an actual dollar bill in a vault somewhere.

Let me be clear: I HAVE NEVER BELIEVED THAT CLAIM. That’s why I never recommended the token.

To date, I still haven’t seen proof of Tether’s reserves.

Many people share my misgivings about Tether… But that hasn’t stopped it from issuing more than $2.5 billion worth of coins. Does Tether have $2.5 billion in cash reserves to back that up? Or is it just printing its own money at will?

Nobody knows.

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Trustless System

The decentralized revolution is about getting rid of “trusted” third parties. Ultimately, coins like Tether will fail if they can’t find a way to become “trustless.”

(With trustless technology, you don’t have to know or trust the person you’re doing business with. The blockchain records and verifies every transaction transparently. So the system builds trust by default.)

Back to the University of Texas report… It suggests that more Tethers were issued than had backing by actual dollars. The report makes the case that Tethers were used to prop up – and ultimately manipulate – the price of bitcoin.

Kessler’s article attempts to use the Texas study to bolster his argument that bitcoin is just another balance sheet-driven bubble, just like every bubble since the South Sea Bubble of 1720.

He argues that temporarily shifting assets from one balance sheet to another inflates a bubble. When the money runs out, the bubble pops.

It’s the type of argument that initially reads well… But it doesn’t really hold up under scrutiny.

For instance, Kessler tries to pin the dot-com crash on America Online’s dot-com-era ad policies. I read his explanation three times, and I still don’t understand how AOL’s ad policies could have caused the dot-com crash.

The dot-com boom was a $5 trillion bubble. It seems a bit of a stretch to pin $5 trillion worth of value destruction on one company’s ad policy.

Kessler also blames the infamous Dutch Tulip Mania of 1636–1637 on balance-sheet manipulation. But that doesn’t work, either. If he had really done his research, he would have found out that the Tulip Mania was an overblown myth. It had nothing to do with balance-sheet manipulation.

(The Smithsonian journal did a great write-up on the Great Tulip Mania and called it more of a fanciful fiction than a serious financial crisis. You can read the essay here.)

If we poke a little more, we can find more holes in Kessler’s bubble theory.

If Kessler is right about last year’s crypto market action, how does he explain the so-called bitcoin bubbles of 2011, 2013, and 2014?

Volatile Asset

If Kessler is going to attack the 2017 action as manipulated, why not attack the 2011, 2013, and 2014 “bubbles?”

Were all of those moves manipulated, too?

If they were, then those are the most unique bubble manipulations I’ve ever seen.

Here’s what I mean…

If you bought at the peak of each move, your average “old” peak to “new” peak gain would be 9.8 times your money.

How many bubbles do you know of that could make you money if you bought at the peak of every move?

I don’t know of any others.

I fear Kessler has confused market volatility with market bubbles. Just because something is volatile doesn’t automatically make it a bubble (or mean that it’s been manipulated). Bitcoin is volatile… but it’s also very valuable.

Fraudulent assets go to zero. True bubbles don’t continue to make higher highs and higher lows the way bitcoin has done.

Bitcoin is a highly volatile asset – not a fraudulent asset.

And that’s why I have always recommended that my readers keep their position sizes small.

(In Palm Beach Confidential, we recommend that investors with smaller accounts place no more than $200–$400 per trade… And that investors with larger accounts place no more than $500–$1,000 per trade.

Cryptocurrencies are volatile. So small position sizes will allow you to keep a cool head during extreme periods of volatility, like we’re seeing in the current crypto market.)

By 2002, the dot-com crash caused the Nasdaq to drop 80%. In 2002, venture capital (VC) investment dropped by 90%.

Contrast that with cryptos.

Right now, the crypto market is down 70%. It seems logical that funding for new VC deals would dry up. But it hasn’t.

VC investment has already doubled from last year, and it’s expected to quadruple by year end.

The key takeaway is that even with the news of manipulations, government meddling, and massive volatility… institutional money is still flowing into this asset in droves.

And what an institution chooses to do with its money will always carry more weight with me than a Wall Street Journal op-ed piece.

Let the Game Come to You!

Teeka Tiwari
Editor, Palm Beach Confidential

P.S. For the first time ever, I have an investment announcement so BIG that I’ve teamed up with media personality Glenn Beck to create a one-off special event. We’re calling it The Great Cryptocurrency Conspiracy of 2018. It will broadcast online on July 19, live from Glenn’s Dallas studios.

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